His Woman

His Woman by Diana Cosby

Book: His Woman by Diana Cosby Read Free Book Online
Authors: Diana Cosby
silence whatever she was about to say. “There is little time for your prattle.” With his arm hurting like the devil, he urged her forward. “Go.”
    The muted yells of men below supported his claim. Once safely away, then he would have his answers.
    Isabel tried to pull free.
    “What?” he demanded.
    She shook her head. “I…It is nothing.”
    “For this once, spare me your lies.”
    Eyes filled with anguish met his. “Only one reason would cause Frasyer to return early. My father is injured. Or”—she swallowed hard, her voice thinning, her entire body beginning to shake—“he is dead.”
    “Isabel.”
    She ignored him. “Mayhap en route, Frasyer arranged for my father to have an accident? Nay, Frasyer wouldn’t kill him,” she rambled. “He would never risk losing his control over me.”
    After her incarceration, the contempt in her voice didn’t surprise Duncan, but her comment resurrected suspicions that she harbored a far darker secret.
    “How long has Frasyer been gone?”
    “Two days.” She frantically searched his face. “But I need to know if my father is alive.”
    “Lord Caelin is not dim-witted,” Duncan said. “With his poor health, he would not be foolish enough to challenge Frasyer or his guards.” Unless he’d imbibed in one too many drinks, which wasn’t likely under the earl’s guard. “I believe he still lives.”
    Isabel seemed to find strength in his words. “Do you truly think so?”
    “Aye.” Duncan scanned the corridor, which was staggered by several doors. “Which room is Frasyer’s?”
    She didn’t seem convinced. “Duncan—”
    “Which one?” he pressed.
    A loud cheer roared from the bailey.
    “It sounds as if they have extinguished the fire. Hurry.” Another wave of weakness struck him. He pushed forward. He refused to pass out until after they’d escaped.
    Isabel shot him a nervous glance. “We may need to search more than Frasyer’s private chamber.”
    “I thought you said that is where he would keep the Bible?”
    “It could be.”
    “But you are not sure?” Duncan muttered, not liking where this conversation was heading or the anxious looks she kept sending him. “We will search every bloody room if need be.”
    Isabel opened her mouth to speak.
    “If you know what is good for you, do not even ask me to leave.”
    Her eyes narrowed, but she remained silent.
    Against the throbbing in his arm, he forced himself to walk by her side, her tantalizing scent doing nothing to improve his foul mood. Neither could he ignore the natural grace with which she walked, or how the fabric clung to her, revealing the soft swells of her breasts.
    “And if the Bible is not in any of his rooms,” he pressed, “where do you suggest we search next?”
    “I am unsure.” Isabel didn’t look toward Duncan. He was furious, how could he not be, but he didn’t understand how his mere presence was tearing her apart. All he could see was her betrayal.
    God, she hated living this lie, how even now, with her father’s life at risk, she couldn’t tell Duncan the true reason she’d walked away from their betrothal. Or of Frayser’s threat to Duncan’s life if she revealed the truth.
    She didn’t doubt Duncan’s abilities with a sword. Given a fair fight, he’d outmaneuver Frasyer as he had over and again throughout their youth. But she knew Frasyer. He wouldn’t fight fair.
    Over the years, she’d prayed to find a way to set things right, then she could tell Duncan everything. After three years, no answer had come.
    Only the passage of time.
    And regret.
    Until this moment, it had not mattered that she’d never visited Frasyer’s private room, that he’d not wanted her except as a reminder of what he’d taken from Duncan. She’d expected to conduct the search in private, her unfamiliarity of his personal living space going unnoticed. How could she fool Duncan? At least before he had arrived, she’d narrowed Frasyer’s personal chamber down to one

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